Mexica Art (Volume I): 75 Stunning Images from Mexico City's Museum of Anthropology and Templo Mayor
This book is both a visual journey and a cultural exploration. Featuring 75 powerful images of masterpieces from Mexico's most important collections, it opens a window into the symbolic universe of the Mexica-better known as the Aztecs.
Through myth and art, the Mexica revealed their understanding of their place in the cosmos. The legendary stories of Coatlicue, Coyolxauhqui, and Huitzilopochtli explain the eternal battle of sun and moon, day and night, life and death. The myth of Aztl n recounts their long migration and the founding of Tenochtitlan in 1325, the city that would become Mexico City. These myths, charged with symbolism, were not just stories but guides for survival, conquest, and collective identity.
Religion, politics, and war were inseparable in Mexica society. Human sacrifice, far from being seen as cruelty, was a sacred duty that kept the universe in balance. Warriors fought with the conviction that their deaths could help the sun rise again, while priests and rulers acted as interpreters of the divine will. Every aspect of their social structure-from nobles and warriors to artisans, farmers, and slaves-was tied to this cosmic vision.
Mexica art reflected this intensity. Unlike European art that often sought beauty or comfort, their sculptures and monuments conveyed power, awe, and raw spiritual force. They were not meant to soothe but to confront, reminding all who looked upon them of the gods' presence and the fragility of existence. Even sexuality had a sacred dimension, celebrated in rituals and imagery, though much of it was later censored or destroyed by Spanish chroniclers.
More than an art book, Mexica Art (Volume I) invites readers to step into a worldview where myth and history, life and death, art and religion were inseparably woven together. It is an exploration of a civilization that reached its height before the arrival of the Spanish, yet whose legacy continues to shape Mexico's identity today.